SACW | Dec.13-14, 2007 / Flawed polls / Dark side of micro-credit / Silences on Gujarat 2002
Harsh Kapoor
aiindex at mnet.fr
Fri Dec 14 01:54:01 CST 2007
South Asia Citizens Wire | December 13-14, 2007 |
Dispatch No. 2476 - Year 10 running
[1] South Asia: Flawed election systems (I.A. Rehman)
[2] Pakistan:
(i) Law of the land (M B Naqvi)
(ii) Most Want Musharraf to Quit, Poll Shows
(David Rohde And Carlotta Gall)
[3] Bangladesh: The dark side of micro-credit (Santi Rozario)
[4] India - Gujarat: Silences and the
impossibility of confabulation after godhra
(Amruth M)
[5] India: Ethnophobia in Guwahati: Reflections
on Twentyfourth November (Prasenjit Biswas)
[6] India in the world: how we see ourselves (Meera Nanda)
[7] Announcements:
(i) Save Democracy Rally in Mani Nagar (Ahmedabad, 13 December, 2007)
(ii) Events at The Second Floor (Karachi, 14, 15, 16 December, 2007)
(iii) Book Launch: Women Building Peace between
India and Pakistan (New Delhi, 14 December 2007)
(iv) Drama Competitions - Last date of entry (Bombay , 15 December 2007)
______
[1]
Dawn
13 December 2007
FLAWED ELECTION SYSTEMS
by I.A. Rehman
SOUTH Asians have many reasons to rue their
condition. Prominent among them is a persistent
failure to establish democratic electoral
mechanisms. Several countries in the region are
facing difficulties in holding free, fair and
democratic elections, and nowhere has the task
become as problematic as in Pakistan.
This became apparent as experts from the region
recently debated the requisites of an 'inclusive
electoral process' at the invitation of a South
Asian human rights network. The experts were
invited to share their experiences of holding
elections and their reform plans with delegates
from the region. The objective was to determine
the essential features of an electoral process
that would meet the highest possible standards
and the result would reflect the pluralist
society that each South Asian country is.
What made a Pakistani disconsolate, though the
deliberations were both stimulating and fruitful,
was the realisation that while different South
Asian states were facing different sets of
problems, Pakistan seemed to have gathered on its
plate all of them and something extra.
Several Indian states are now in the grip of
election fever, none more than Gujarat where a
chief minister who has been universally condemned
for the 2002 pogrom is threatening India's entire
effort at establishing a secular democracy.
Nothing causes the democrats there more anguish
than the gnawing feeling that the more Narendra
Modi's criminal record is exposed the better his
chances of return to power seem to become. And
this despite the existence of the most powerful
of the national election authorities in the
region, one that is known for speedily responding
to challenges and holding its own against the
executive. Unavoidable is the question: what good
is an electoral process if it cannot offer the
people safety and security against a communalist
predator?
Pakistan's fledgling democrats may be facing a
similar problem: how to devise an electoral
framework that cannot be exploited by
anti-democratic elements to make a mockery of
democratic institutions.
Nepal claims to have mobilised people's power to
establish a democratic order twice in less than
two decades. Last year the people won their right
to a new constitution to be framed by a
democratically elected constituent assembly. The
promised election has already been delayed by
many months. Meanwhile extra-democratic attempts,
some of them extra-legal too, are being made to
ensure what General Ziaul Haq would have
described as 'positive results'. Does this amount
to pre-poll rigging?
Only a decade has passed since Bangladesh took
the lead in providing in the constitution for an
independent caretaker regime for holding a
general election. The initiative was hailed in
all neighbouring countries. Most of all in
Pakistan where elections have been more suspect
than elsewhere. But the result desired has not
been achieved, thanks to the well-known South
Asian genius for bending constitutional
provisions to suit partisan interests. The
present caretakers have been unable to hold
elections within the stipulated period. These are
now promised in 2008.
Meanwhile, the Bangladesh regime is trying to use
legal instruments to root out political
corruption, something all military rulers in
Pakistan have done and failed. More promising
perhaps are attempts to develop a foolproof poll
system. Which merely shows that independent
caretakers, if such angels can at all be found,
are not enough to guarantee fair elections if the
electoral system remains flawed. Unfortunately
the Pakistan regime appears determined not to
learn this lesson till some more time has been
lost in debilitating misadventures.
The history of Pakistan shows that soon after
independence the party in power developed such a
dread of reference to the people that it moved
farther and farther away from the minimum
standards of free and fair elections. Worse, none
of its successors has made any meaningful effort
to break with the unholy tradition. As a result,
no general election can be claimed to have been
fair. The one or two elections that are popularly
believed to have been relatively fair deserve the
distinction because of a general impression that
official manipulation was on a lower scale than
usual.
Further, attempts at electoral reform have been
largely limited to ensuring orderly polling or,
latterly, to basing results on a correct count of
the ballots cast. Important though these aspects
of a general election are they do not meet the
most decisive requirements of fair and democratic
elections. The main defects and deficiencies of
Pakistan's electoral system can be summarised as
under:
* The franchise is still not wholly democratic.
The Ahmedis continue to be denied, contrary to
law, the benefit of the joint electorate system
that was revived, after 17 years of deviation, in
2002. In respect of other communities too the
logic of a single voters' list is not fully
respected.
* The fruits of the electoral system are not
available in full measure to the people living in
Fata and the Northern Areas.
* The government continues to resist the demand
for an independent and efficient Election
Commission. The mode of the Chief Election
Commissioner's appointment, the system of forming
the Election Commission only after an election
has been notified and the initial part of the
electoral process completed, the commission's
lack of comprehension of democratic imperatives,
and its failure to protect the democratic rights
of the more vulnerable elements - women, the
poorest sections, homeless nomads, the riverbank
population, the prison population and
non-resident Pakistanis - all imply institutional
obstacles to fair election.
* Failure to eliminate exploitation of belief for
electoral advantage and denial of the right to
vote and contest election to women, both offences
listed in the penal code, seriously undermine the
sanctity and credibility of elections.
* The objective of registering all eligible voters remains unrealised.
* The government sees nothing wrong in the
escalating costs of contesting elections which is
increasingly limiting the field to people of
doubtful credentials.
* A huge majority of the underprivileged is
excluded from electoral contest, thereby making
progress towards a pluralist democracy
impossible. Even suggestions that some of the
candidates' financial burden should be assumed by
the Election Commission have gone unheeded.
* Successive regimes have sought to suppress the
fundamental issue that democratic elections are
impossible under a regime that can manipulate the
Constitution and the law for personal or
factional gain.
Unless the above-mentioned impediments to fair
elections, some of which are institutional in
character, are removed the crisis of legitimacy
will not be over.
One of the painful conclusions from the South
Asian experts' deliberations is the reluctance of
states such as Pakistan to learn from positive
initiatives within the region. For instance, the
Bangladesh Election Commission claims to have
found a way to eliminate personation or chances
of anyone voting more than once by preparing
biometric records of each one of the country's 90
million voters. If this system works the problems
caused by defects in voter lists,
non-availability of polling agents and lack of
identification papers (NIC, etc) may disappear.
The Indian Election Commission asserts that its
electronic voting machines guarantee a fair
count, and that no complaint of manipulating
results has been heard for 11 years. Has Pakistan
studied this process?
The only explanation for Pakistan's keenness to
persist with a flawed electoral system and a
moribund Election Commission could be its
permanent establishment's contempt for the
people's sovereign rights.
_____
[2] [ Citizens Challenge Emergency Rule in
Pakistan > http://emergency2007.blogspot.com/]
(i)
The News International
December 12, 2007
LAW OF THE LAND
by M B Naqvi
Unending confusion grips the opposition parties
over assessing the Musharraf regime Mark II,
along with the scarcely neutral caretakers and
the changes made under the emergency, the PCO and
the new media ordinances. It is a continuation of
the previous government; it is sure to do what
Musharraf wants. Thus the country is basically
polarised between Musharraf partisans and those
who claim to be anti-Musharraf forces, while
everybody knows that his regime now intends to
rule through naked force, with a deceptive façade
of democracy-seeming institutions.
This new Musharraf regime is a creature of the
virtual martial law of Nov 3 - a logical reaction
of his dictatorship when challenged - and is
engaged in two major operations: first, to
acquire ever more powers than before for the
recently retired general to rule repressively for
another five years while claiming to run a
democracy. Secondly, he wants to keep all his
foreign and domestic supporters happy - by his
unchanged social, economic and foreign policies.
How strong is this regime? Musharraf's strength
should not be underrated. He is supported
formally by PML-Q grandees, the MQM, the PPP (S),
the PPP (Patriots). Those who participate in the
Jan 8 election - being organised and managed by
him in conditions created by the emergency, the
PCO and the muzzling of the media - should be
counted as his supporters, their
opposition-sounding noises notwithstanding. The
JUIs of Maulanas Fazlur Rahman and Samiul Haq
come under this category, as does Ms Benazir
Bhutto's PPP. For all the ballyhoo about
reserving the right to boycott, her party's
dogged resistance to making the restoration of
pre-Nov 3 conditions, especially the Supreme
Court judges' restoration, a precondition for
participating in the polls shows her anxiety to
strengthen Musharraf in accordance with the
putative deal the US had brokered, if Musharraf
does not renege on it.
So, who remains in the boycott camp? Under the
mean and opportunistic principle of not leaving
the field to "others," the Jamaat-e-Islami will
participate because the JUI is doing so, the
PML(N) has also decided to play the game because
the PPP is doing it. Maybe a few small parties
might finally remain in the boycott camp, though
even that is not certain.
A via media has emanated from the interned Aitzaz
Ahsan of all people: let all opposition parties
compel their candidates to sign a piece of paper
pledging support for reinstating all PCOed judges
in the new Parliament being elected by
Musharraf-nominated caretakers. One was aghast at
this: Aitzaz forgot the disconnect between the
ongoing lawyers' and civil society's campaign to
realise, as a precondition to participation, the
reversion to pre-Nov 3 (2007) Pakistan, though
later he returned to his original loyalty to the
lawyers' movement.
What the parties have done risks the ending of
the momentum of the lawyers' movement. The shape
of politics and immediate issues will look vastly
different in the post-election period. Politics
will be all about government-making, deals and
alliances under the smiling visage of the
ex-general. Reviving the previous year's issues
will be so much more difficult. To recall, the
Aitzaz proposal was a testimony of his loyalty to
Benazir Bhutto and his readiness to sacrifice
personal ambition for her uncertain favours.
But all this is superficial. Look closely. All
Pakistan's social and economic elites support
Musharraf. A large number of bigger landlords
simply love Musharraf - so long as he is in
power. All big industrialists, bankers, big
business magnates and conscienceless successful
professionals have always been on the side of
military dictators. This is an awesome array of
forces.
Who else is a supporter of dictatorship? Well,
why forget the only hyper power there is. Look at
the crowded drawing rooms of political leaders in
Islamabad, Lahore, Karachi and Peshawar, waiting
to be graced by western ambassadors and CJs. The
latter group is rooting for Musharraf: "Be
responsible transitionists, take part in
elections and jointly build democracy." What the
west wants is obvious: "War on Islamic terrorists
is on; horses cannot be changed midstream; let
Musharraf lead the side but go and join him to
prosecute the war more effectively; this election
will lead Pakistan to democracy's goal; and that
is where you and we want to be."
Finally, the strongest supporter of Musharraf was
his military constituency. The Army is tightly
united and it was the Army, qua Army (in the
absence of Gen. Musharraf) that seized power on
Oct 12, 1999. It has sound professional, economic
and even political reasons not to desert
Musharraf: the entire officers' corps stands to
lose (some) perks and future opportunities if the
people of Pakistan manage to overthrow Musharraf.
Hence, the Army is likely to remain loyal to
Musharraf - for some time anyway.
Those who want undiluted democracy, made by the
people with independent judiciary, free media and
the citizens' rights made enforceable, have to
replace this regime by a more popular one without
giving up their vigil. This is a challenge to a
formidable foe. History shows that phenomenally
powerful and cruel regimes can be overthrown by a
people - provided they become aware of both their
rights and are prepared to fight for them.
Nothing is more powerful than an aware and united
people.
This is a simple truth, but it is not the whole
truth. A people's awareness needs leadership -
not for hero-worshipping but for functional
purposes. This role is normally played by a host
of factors: political parties, intelligentsia,
media, especially press, blogs and what is now
the worldwide explosion of knowledge, creating
the climate of the time. In Pakistan, one says
with a heavy heart that political parties have
been too venal, too opportunistic (misusing the
term pragmatism) and have hardly ever risen to a
situation. One is aware that all the military
dictators have demonised political leaders as
corrupt, inept and inefficient. Much of it was
self-serving. But not all of it was false.
Anyway, how are they behaving today? Do they show
any awareness of where they are being used by
foreign powers and misled by their own
opportunism?
The year 2007 saw a new star rising and a new
saga was written after March 9. The show of force
was necessitated by Mr Justice Iftikhar Chaudhry
having already proven to be a tough nut to crack.
He stood his ground and demanded an open trial.
Pakistanis were startled and saw in him a symbol
of resistance to tyranny. The lawyers' community
- led by men like Aitzaz Ahsan, Munir Malik, Ali
Ahmad Kurd, Hamid Khan - rose to the occasion.
The people were electrified and poured out of
their humble homes to shower love and respect for
the cause represented by the lawyers and the
chief justice. Where does this authentic
leadership stand vis-à-vis the people's struggle
for what is their liberation? It is all about the
latter. It must continue and gather strength.
Well, it is nowhere being acknowledged. Because
no big party in the ARD and the APDM insists on
returning to the pre-Nov 3 position or a really
independent judiciary as a precondition to an
election intended to renew Musharraf's presidency
through an election that is meant to achieve a
given result. Most of these parties will take the
Musharraf-laid-down path to sanctify his Oct 6
"re-election" and to work under a Constitution
that will emerge after he has made all the
changes he wants.
This will be a clear regression. Instead of
taking up the cause of the lawyers, judges and
journalists and to accept the leadership of the
new icons of the people, which would have
enhanced their own, they have responded to
Musharraf's cause and George Bush's message. They
deserted their own people's cause, as if
Musharraf Mark II can be any better. Why lawyers
cannot form a party of a new kind to offer a new
leadership for attaining democracy to save
Pakistan, as Justice Wajihuddin has said.
o o o
(ii)
[The IRI poll mentioned in tthe article below is
available online at
http://www.iri.org/mena/pakistan/pdfs/2007-12-12-pakistan-poll.pdf
]
--
New York Times
December 13, 2007
MOST WANT MUSHARRAF TO QUIT, POLL SHOWS
by David Rohde And Carlotta Gall
ISLAMABAD, Pakistan - The first comprehensive
public opinion poll conducted in Pakistan since
President Pervez Musharraf declared a state of
emergency last month has found that 67 percent of
Pakistanis want him to resign immediately and
that 70 percent say his government does not
deserve re-election.
The poll suggests that Mr. Musharraf will have to
engage in substantial vote rigging to have the
government of his choice win national elections
on Jan. 8.
The survey also calls into question the view in
the United States of Mr. Musharraf as a leader
who can effectively rule Pakistan and deliver in
the campaign against terrorism. And it suggests
that civil unrest could erupt if Mr. Musharraf
were to win the election.
The poll was conducted by the International
Republican Institute, a nonprofit group based in
Washington that is affiliated with the Republican
Party and promotes democracy abroad. The results
were provided to The New York Times before their
release on Thursday.
Pakistan's two main opposition leaders, Benazir
Bhutto and Nawaz Sharif, each a former prime
minister, are already accusing Mr. Musharraf of
fixing the vote in advance and vowing protests if
he prevails.
"If elections are rigged, we are going to need to
be in a position like the people of Ukraine were,
to protest those elections," Ms. Bhutto said at a
news conference last week. "A plan is under way
to rig the elections, and to stop progress
towards democracy."
On Nov. 3, Mr. Musharraf declared a state of
emergency, abrogated Pakistan's Constitution,
fired the Supreme Court, blacked out the
independent news channels and arrested more than
5,000 of his opponents. Since then, most
prisoners have been released and Mr. Musharraf
has resigned from his post as army chief, but his
actions have "polarized" Pakistani society,
according to the poll.
Two-thirds of those surveyed "expressed anger at
the current state of affairs, desired change and
were anti-Musharraf," the institute said. And one
third "remained supportive of President Musharraf
and were positive about the condition of the
country."
An American-backed proposal that Mr. Musharraf
form a government with Ms. Bhutto also appears to
be deeply unpopular. Sixty percent of Pakistanis
polled opposed such a deal, which American
officials had hoped would bolster support for Mr.
Musharraf.
Instead, 58 percent said they would support a
"Grand Opposition Alliance" among Ms. Bhutto, Mr.
Sharif and other parties against Mr. Musharraf, a
former general who seized power in a 1999 coup.
Fifty-six percent said the army, which has
intermittently ruled Pakistan since it won
independence from Britain 60 years ago, should
have no role in civilian government.
If Ms. Bhutto and Mr. Sharif do not form an
alliance, the country appears to be headed toward
a hung Parliament, according to the poll. Asked
which party they would support in elections, 30
percent of those polled said they would support
Ms. Bhutto's party, 25 percent named Mr. Sharif's
and 23 percent favored Mr. Musharraf's.
The poll was based on the responses of 3,520
randomly selected men and women from across
Pakistan, according to the institute. It has a
margin of error of plus or minus 1.69 percentage
points.
"If they did unite, they would put themselves in
a much stronger position," said Robert Varsalone,
the institute's country director, referring to
Ms. Bhutto and Mr. Sharif.
But the two are bitter personal rivals and,
according to Pakistani political analysts,
unlikely to be able to form a government
together. They predicted continued political
instability if no party wins the vote decisively,
with Mr. Musharraf, Ms. Bhutto and Mr. Sharif all
vying to cobble together governing coalitions
with smaller parties.
The poll also identified several worrying trends
for Mr. Musharraf's party. Seventy percent of
Pakistanis said they felt the country was headed
in the wrong direction and 51 percent said their
personal economic situation had worsened. And Mr.
Sharif, who returned to Pakistan from exile two
weeks ago, appears to be drawing center-right
voters away from Mr. Musharraf, a key source of
his support.
Pakistani and Western observers warn that clear
signs already exist that Mr. Musharraf and his
supporters are manipulating the election. They
fear a repeat of nationwide elections won by Mr.
Musharraf's party in 2002.
"It was Pakistan's most rigged election," said
Ijaz Gilani, chairman of Gallup Pakistan, an
Islamabad-based polling and research firm. "Never
in our history have we had so much pre-poll and
post-poll rigging."
The irregularities were numerous, according to
the opposition and observers, including education
requirements that knocked opposition candidates
off the ballot and the severe gerrymandering of
districts in favor of Mr. Musharraf's supporters.
Long before the race, Ms. Bhutto and Mr. Sharif
had been forced into exile, weakening the ability
of their parties to function.
As the race approached, Mr. Musharraf took over
much of Mr. Sharif's party, the Pakistan Muslim
League. He also passed a requirement that all
candidates have a university degree, a measure
that knocked some of Ms. Bhutto's and Mr.
Sharif's strongest candidates off the ballot.
Ikram Sehgal, a defense analyst and retired army
pilot who runs a security company, said
government and intelligence officials also
engaged in "post-poll rigging," pressing
successful candidates from other parties to
defect.
"They would say: 'You have not paid your taxes,
here are the bills. These are the corruption
cases against you,' " he said.
This year, the country's election commission,
judiciary and local governments are all run by
officials loyal to Mr. Musharraf. Analysts say
the president has used the state of emergency to
create an electoral playing field that favors his
candidates, constraining media coverage, public
rallies and the length of the campaign.
The dismissal and continued detention of Supreme
Court and High Court judges "sent a very strong
signal" that election results could not be
appealed, according an election observer who
spoke on condition of anonymity.
Instead of the standard 60-day campaign,
candidates will have only three weeks after
emergency rule, which is expected to end this
weekend. Restrictions will remain against rallies
and processions, which are only permitted in
proscribed places.
And Mr. Musharraf has muzzled the country's news
media, barring live coverage of election rallies
and popular political talk shows. Under a new
ordinance unilaterally enacted by Mr. Musharraf
under emergency rule, television journalists face
up to three years in jail for broadcasting
"anything which defames or brings into ridicule
the head of state."
In a letter to stations on Monday, government
officials accused them of airing live telephone
calls from the public that contained "baseless
propaganda against Pakistan and incite people to
violence." If the practice continued, they said,
station owners and journalists could be jailed.
Fears also exist that government resources are
being used in favor of election candidates. The
nazim, or district mayor, who controls the local
government officials running polling stations,
can oversee rigging, Mr. Sehgal said. Opposition
parties have demanded they be replaced by neutral
officials during the election campaign.
Mr. Sehgal also said law enforcement agencies
could shutter polling stations where opposition
candidates were expected to do well on the
pretext that there were disturbances. "The police
find out where they could lose a polling station
and they close it early," he said. "And they put
the votes of their party in the box."
And after ballots are cast, there are concerns
about how the vote will be tallied, according to
the election observer. Political party observers
may be barred from election centers where results
from across the constituency will be totaled.
"It's a huge deficiency," he said.
On Wednesday, Aitzaz Ahsan, a top lawyer who has
been under house arrest during the state of
emergency was imposed, announced that he was
pulling out of the election, in deference to the
lawyers who have sought a boycott of elections
until the former Supreme Court is restored.
He and other lawyers predict the vote will be
rigged. Mr. Sehgal estimates that Pervez Elahi,
the former chief minister of Punjab Province and
the leading candidate from Mr. Musharraf's party,
can secure 100 seats in Punjab by virtue of his
control of government machinery there.
Without rigging, he would only get 45 to 50
seats, he said. Mr. Gilani said his polling has
shown 20 percent support for Mr. Musharraf's
party after the emergency.
______
[3]
opendemocracy.net
10 december 2007
THE DARK SIDE OF MICRO-CREDIT
by Santi Rozario
Bangladesh's pioneering micro-finance revolution
is also helping to fuel the twin abuses of dowry
and domestic violence. Santi Rozario investigates
Over the last two to three decades rural
Bangladeshi society has experienced a complex
range of developments. Among these, NGOs,
micro-finance institutions and garment industries
have become the major agents of change in the
lives of rural Bangladeshi women. Women's
increased access to independent sources of
finance, through participation in outside paid
employment or through micro-credit, is usually
taken as one of the main indicators of the
improvement of women's status and of women's
empowerment.
However, a puzzle remains: if these positive
changes have resulted in women's "empowerment",
why has there not been the kind of improvements
in women's position that might be expected, such
as the reduction or abolition of dowry payments,
or a reduction in domestic violence? Indeed, if
anything these tend to be going in the opposite
direction. Dowry amounts continue to rise, as
does the associated violence against women.
Also on micro-finance in Bangladesh:
Farida Khan, "Muhammad Yunus: an economics for peace"
It is true that individual women, women's
organisations and other NGOs continue to struggle
against these problems. Yet, despite all this
effort, women continue to be subject to demands
for large amounts of dowry as a condition for
acceptance by their groom's family. Married women
are also frequently subjected to physical and
psychological violence by their husbands and
in-laws if they cannot keep bringing in more and
more dowry, especially within the first few years
of their marriage.
Understanding dowry
To understand the seemingly intractable problem
of dowry, we need to understand the rationale
behind the practice. Dowry practices in
Bangladesh (the demand or dabi from grooms'
families) are a relatively new phenomenon. Their
rise is linked to the capitalist transformation
of the Bangladeshi economy since the late 1960s
and the resultant disjunction between the demands
of the economy and the system of values in
Bangladeshi society.
This has led to a valorization of men and
devalorization of women, legitimated both by a
socially created surplus of marriageable women
compared to men, and also by the threat posed to
ideas of women's purity and honour by women's
increasing physical mobility. All this in turn
has made it possible for dowry to become a
critical source of capital for families with
sons, who are an increasingly prized commodity.
These new negative developments in relation to
women and dowry can be understood better by
appreciating that in Bangladeshi culture marriage
and dependence upon your husband is thought
essential for women. By 'dependence' I mean both
perceived and real economic dependency as well as
the moral or cultural dependency of all women on
one or another adult man of their family. The
necessity for all women to be married, along with
the perceived 'risks' posed by an unmarried woman
to her family's honour, means that families feel
pressured to marry off their daughters as soon as
possible after puberty. This lowers the marriage
age for women, so creating a perceived surplus of
women in relation to men, who are not under the
same pressure to marry and so generally marry
later in life. This again leads to further
inflation of dowries and to the further devaluing
of women - economically, culturally and morally -
in relation to men.
Beyond the law
Dowry was declared illegal in Bangladesh in 1980.
However, like many other laws in Bangladesh this
has had little or no impact. When faced with
demands for large dowries, families are reluctant
to take legal action for fear of losing suitable
grooms. Thus villagers will say that if one
family takes legal action, no other potential
grooms will come forward to ask to marry a girl
from that village in future. While there are
para-legal staff in some rural villages, poor
people only seek their assistance when a woman
has been divorced after repeated demands for more
and more dowry, combined with extensive violence.
Families never report cases when dowry is
demanded during marital negotiations.
When I asked several groups of poor women what
was their biggest problem during some recent
research for CARE Bangladesh, their almost
unanimous answer was "dowry". When I asked about
violence, I heard numerous stories about how most
of the violence against women was related to
their parents' inability to meet the demands of
husbands and their families for more and more
money or other goods.
Dowry has come to be one of the most critical
sources of capital for all families. It is not
only practiced as a one-off payment during
marriage, but many families continue to use their
newly-married incoming wives as an ongoing source
of capital, by sending them back to their natal
home again and again to bring back more capital.
If the wives' families cannot oblige, the wives
are subjected to violence, or even divorce.
One such woman I spoke to, Ruksana, is the second
of four sisters from a poor family. She was
married to her cousin Ataul, and her parents paid
80,000 Bangladeshi Taka as dowry. After the
marriage her mother-in-law mistreated her and
demanded a bicycle, some jewellery and additional
Tk30,000. Ruksana's mother took a Tk7000 loan
from Grameen Bank, bought a cycle and made some
ear-rings in the hope that the mother-in-law (her
own brother's wife) would treat her daughter
better, but Ruksana was pressured for more money.
Ruksana did not want to tell her parents since
they were already struggling to keep up payments
on the first loan and could not afford enough
food. Her mother-in-law then tricked her into
signing divorce papers (she was told the papers
were to obtain another loan), forced her to
return to her parents' house, and arranged a new
marriage for Ataul.
The dark side of micro-credit
This is where micro-credit has contributed to the
escalation of dowry. While micro-credit has
benefited large sections of the rural population
in many ways, it has also worked against women's
solidarity and contributed heavily to the
inflation of dowry. Grooms' families are aware
that money is available to brides' families more
easily now, through Grameen Bank, the Bangladesh
Rural Advancement Committee (BRAC) or other NGOs.
I have often heard of women being sent home to
persuade their parents to borrow money from an
NGO for their husbands to invest in business,
including buying items such as rickshaws, vans,
grocery shops or irrigation pumps.
Although in theory micro-finance institutions do
not lend money for the purposes of dowry payment,
in practice it is common knowledge among the
barefoot bankers (micro-finance institution
employees distributing and collecting loans among
village people) that most village families depend
on micro-credit to meet dowry demands.
It is because of such near universal dependence
of men on their wives' families for capital that
dowry has come to be perceived by women's
organisations as intractable and as 'too
political' a problem to tackle directly.
Dismantling the hierarchy
Notwithstanding certain structural constraints, I
still believe there are ways to arrest the
problem of dowry, and in my work for CARE I made
a number of recommendations. They include;
collaboration between institutions working for
women's rights to campaign on dowry, inheritance
rights and domestic violence; development of a
large-scale rural legal aid service following the
model already developed by Ain o Salish Kendra
(ASK) and the Bangladesh Rural Advancement
Committee (BRAC); working with religious
authorities; use of media, education and role
models to contest village stereotypes of women.
Another key point to consider is that the
perpetuation of dowry and violence against women
cannot only be blamed on men, particularly poor
men. It is actually the middle-class families,
who keep their women relatively sheltered in
order to protect their purity and honour, and
compete most heavily for status hierarchy through
dowry displays, who are most responsible for
perpetuating both dowry practices and gender
domination.
Middle-class women too gain from this status
hierarchy. They demand dowry for their sons, are
relatively able to pay large dowry for their
daughters, and play active roles in maintaining
their superior status in relation to less
well-off women. As a result, they are often the
people least willing to reject the dowry system.
It is hard to see how things will change for poor
village families when they are taken for granted
by the rural and urban middle classes, who act as
moral arbiters for the society as a whole.
In tackling the problem of middle class
attitudes, a piecemeal approach may work. In the
shorter term, the younger middle class
generation, who might have studied abroad and
returned to Bangladesh, and do not necessarily
share the same values to their parents, could be
targeted. They are more often prepared to
challenge familial values, for instance by
marrying someone of their own choice without
involvement of dowries.
There also needs to be a dialogue between the
women's organisations - especially legal ones
such as Ask and the Bangladesh National Women
Lawyers' Association (BNWLA) - and religious
leaders. I believe if there is the political will
on the part of the government, women's
organisations, religious leaders, large NGOs and
civil society in general, religious leaders can
be used quite effectively in addressing the
problem of dowry and violence against women.
There is some precedence for this; in recent
years religious leaders have been used very
successfully in motivating large sections of the
village people into accepting contraceptives
within a relatively short space of time.
Finally, education is frequently recommended as a
solution to all sorts of problems in Bangladeshi
society. I would recommend the same, but with
less emphasis on rote learning and more on
educating the young so they begin to question
gender and other structural hierarchies very
early in life.
______
[4]
Economic & Political Weekly
December 8, 2007
SILENCES AND THE IMPOSSIBILITY OF CONFABULATION AFTER GODHRA
by Amruth M
The silence on Tehelka's exposure of the state
machinery's connivance in the anti-Muslim carnage
in Gujarat is not as telling as the creation of
an atmosphere where such silence is acceptable.
And the opposition has let Narendra Modi set the
agenda by arguing about development rather than
his government's complicity in the post-Godhra
murders and rape.
What follow are thoughts on a congealing paradigm
of government in Gujarat. These are in resonance
with a recent commentary in the EPW that
challenged the validity of the "Vibrant Gujarat"
electoral campaign by the Narendra Modi regime.1
While it is on grounds of the state's blatant
refusal to treat victims of the 2002 carnage as
citizens (let alone as internal refugees) that
the authors countered the claims of develop- ment
in the state, here the focus is on yet another
symbol of the state's hegemony. This is posed in
the aftermath of the weekly Tehelka bringing out
new and tell-tale evidence of state connivance in
the post-Godhra carnage and in the context of the
ongoing electoral cam- paigns in the state.2 It
is the near-total absence of discussions, or as I
would prefer to call it, the impossibility of
con- fabulation on the issue, that strikes an
observer of these campaigns and func- tioning of
the mass media in the state.3 Here effort is not
to unearth the complex roots of this benumbing
scenario, but rather to point out the tendentious
nature of this void and its consequences.
Though Gujarat has a record of recurrent riots,
the post-Godhra carnage remains distinct due to
the unprecedented phenomenon of the connivance of
state machinery in the killings.4 Pieces of
evidence affirming the state's proactive role in
the massacre have been accumulating over the last
five years; the Tehelka account is the latest
among them. It assumes special significance as it
was released less than seven weeks before the
first phase of the assembly polls.5
With the polls approaching, the manner in which
the public, politicians, media and the regime
have (dis)engaged with this disclosure defies
simple explanation. The near-total refusal of the
media and politicians (including the engineers of
the carnage and the political opposition) even to
acknowledge its gravity has been glaring. Many
justify this as a strategic silence lest the
issue potentially polarises votes in favour of
the ruling regime. But this deafening silence,
laying bare the inability to sustain a discussion
on the injustice, is symptomatic of a disturbing
pattern in society. For, this silence
demonstrates an impossibility of critical public
discourse on the topic. And for me, it is this
impossibility that defines the problematic for
the moment.6
silences, Meanings and Memories
Silence has the potential to assume multi- ple
meanings (hence, silences). Here, on the one
hand, the refusal to discuss the carnage in the
context of the Tehelka ex- posure by the ruling
regime clearly implies a shying away from
acknowledging its role in the carnage and
wrongfulness of the act. On the other, this
amounts to hegem- onic valorisation of the
violence and thus the creation of a fear factor.
The ruling re- gime, instead, wants to project
itself as a deliverer of development. It is
obvious that the Modi regime is keen on filling
the void it created with the claims of
development. Thus, development has come to be a
boldly written placard to cover its own blood-
stained face for the regime.
Pitifully, even the opposition, while
acknowledging its inability to sustain the issue
of genocide or the criminality of the act as a
central issue of campaign, has ended up reacting
to the claims of the rul- ing regime and its
failure to deliver devel- opment.7 This
hesitation in speaking out with that of Modi's
refusal to discuss the issue (he walked out of an
interview on a national TV channel and has
refused to discuss the carnage in interviews)8
and his contrasting eloquence on development and
Gujarati provincialism, is not acciden- tal but
foundational in the constitution of a particular
mode of silence in society. While Modi's
taciturnity may be easily interpreted as his
losing ground on the issue, the very fact that
his opponents were compelled to discuss the
agenda set by him (development) proves that the
con- verse is true. For the opposition, this
amounts to adopting given idioms and figures of
speech and, thus, the rules of the game itself.
It is disheartening to note that the situation
renders true the fears aired by Tarun Tejpal
(Tehelka editor) in his prophetic "Read, and Be
Afraid" remarks on the issue, where he observed
that soci- ety and politicians are indifferent
and hesitant to keeping alive the memory of this
injustice, the carnage.9 The current vicissitudes
in the larger public morality making discussion
an impossibility are a clear indication of the
trend. Here, what is signi ficant is not "the
silence" that is de- sired by the ruling regime,
rather the created context in which the silence
is perpetuated among the contesting and
contending agencies on a serious issue pertinent
to justice. silencing the Media The incidence of
blackout of cable televi- sion networks during
the broadcast of the Tehelka exposure (following
directions by a senior civil servant) on grounds
of the programme's conceived potential to create
a communal flare-up and a sub- sequent ban on
four television channels are instances of
silencing the media.10 Jamming the cable network
is being justified on the pretext of censoring
the sensitive contents of the programme. What is
invoked here is the idea of exist- ence of a
delicate communal situation that is susceptible
to a flare-up even at the slightest of
provocations. This act of si- lencing, the
silence thus sustained and the near-total failure
of resistance are a clear reflection of the
state's role in dampening critical discourses.
This, however, is only the tip of the pro-
verbial iceberg, where the invisibility of the
state's role in engendering these silences has
wider implications for society. For instance the
unofficial and off-the- record ban effected on
the movie Parzania is a telling incident;11 a
clear indication of the progressive muting in
Gujarat's society. Strategies of silencing have
now shifted from the visible to the invisible,
record to off-the-record, vocal to silent,
pre-empting and defying any attempts to bring it
in front of the judiciary. This process is
symptomatic and reveals the nature of the power
structure and hege- mony that makes vocalising
those topics for discussion impossible. How was
this hegemony made possible? It is not only
through the state police. The saffron cadre too
functions as perpetuators of insecurity and
threat and who have the ability to hold the
minority to ransom. In short, the totalitarian
potential of the state is decentralised to a near
complete level of saffron foot soldiers. The
result is an off- the-record regime of terror.
Here is not a case of the state failing but a
case of ex- treme consolidation of state
machinery for cover-ups and rebuffs - in short,
transmutation to an off-the-record para- digm of
government where there is no hope for justice.
state of exception The Tehelka exposure is said
to have "revealed" nothing hitherto unknown to
the public.12 The involvement of the state has
been a public secret in Gujarat's society. This
public secret has deeper implications as this
public knowledge has been silenced, making
society unforth- coming and hesitant to engage
with the matter in discussions. This also
constitutes a kind of insecurity - perpetuated
through awareness of the state's ability to
legiti- mise terror, persecution and yet another
carnage and get away with it. All are aware of
these capacities of the ruling regime either as
witness, prey or predator of the pogrom. In this
sense the 2002 carnage, the subsequent act of
protecting the accused and trivialisation of the
victims was stage-managed to produce a
demonstrative effect on not only the spectators
but also the predators and prey. This "real
drama" turned out to be enormously successful in
producing intended results such as production of
fear and silence.
Another strategy of manufacturing fear and
imposing silence involves perpetuation of a sense
of impending insecurity in the state. A sense of
existence of such a "state of exception" or
"state of possible siege" is enabled by
disproportionate pub- licity to the possibility
that episodes similar to the 2002 carnage would
be repeated by events of (false) encounters with
"militants" in the state. We know very well that
the declaration of a state of exception is a
strategic excuse made by modern states to
legitimise freezing of fundamental rights of
their subjects by imposing special rules of
law.13 Creation of such twilight zones in
democracy has come to stay as a paradigm of
government in the state.
The claims of development in Gujarat, (in
references to Chandhoke et al (2007)), should
necessarily invite the question of who are
included and who are excluded from the process.
Or more precisely one should ask, "development
for whom"? For the victims of the carnage and the
displaced this development signifies denigration
to a second-class citizenry, and worse still,
losing citizenship itself. These victims are
unqualified by birth for the best manifestations
of governance, the national destiny -
development. If development here means also
social justice and equality, they are ineligible
for these too. The state machinery's refusal to
provide the victims access to customary services
such as power, water, public distribution system,
education, healthcare, justice, etc, signifies
denial of their rightful citizenry.
We hear of the plights of victims stripped of
even the last remnants of legal and political
privileges and becoming a legal and political
non-entity.14 In other words, these are bare
lives dumped along
with the wastes of galloping urban consumption in
India's "most prosperous state" where the ruling
regime projects itself as the messiah of
development.15
They are also bare lives whose extermination the
state would not care to stall or lament. It is a
paradox which society has already come to terms
with. And the silences and silencing function as
an effective mechanism to engineer social
exclusion once again demonstrates how development
as an empty signifier can contain so many
contradictory meanings.
controlling grammar
The silence also points to the perpetuation and
reinforcement of an existing structure of
hegemony that is effected through violence. The
basic features of these structures of hegemony
are mutual exclusion or segregation and extreme
imparity in accessing facilities and amenities
among communities. This gradually leads to the
production of different contexts of experiences
and meanings. By structures, here we refer not
only to urban life, work and commercial spaces,
public services, and financial institutions but
also to discourses such as development, justice,
citizenship, and equality. For instance, the
spatial segregation of urban living, work and
commercial spaces is extreme between the Hindu
and Muslim communities in Ahmedabad. And this
divide is not limited to the material realm
alone, but extends to the symbolic realm as well,
i e, there are walls of segregation everywhere
dividing the meanings and experiences between
communities.
The structures of everyday experience of the
communities have become so segregated that a
particular kind of normalisation has been taking
place. And this segregation is productive of
majority and minority subjectivity or a "majority
becoming" of the Hindu community and a "minority
becoming" of the Muslim community.
This polarisation has, thus, simply enabled
production of often diametrically opposite
meanings, so much so that it is impossible to
hold a shared discourse. This divide cannot be
seen separately from the silences we are
referring to but these are integral to the divide
itself. This particular silence and silencing
undercuts preconditions for viable civil society
discourses, validity of representational
electoral process, and efforts to create a more
inclusive society. Instead, here the
impossibility of shared experiences becomes an
instrument for a vocal mode of social exclusion.
Making the cry Heard
Given these conditions, elements of civil society
discourse in existence in Gujarat are but too
fragmented and unable to generate a coherent
grammar for sustaining counter-discourses.16 This
is at the same time cause and consequence,
constituting and constitutive, mutually
reinforcing of the silence and silencing. So the
effort here should be to create a space for
viable civil society discourse. The modalities
with which such a space can be created would
necessarily mean adoption of a variety of
strategies from reclaiming of the subsumed
biographies, giving voices to erased minority
subjecthoods to recre- ating new structures of
experiences. Any such effort should also include
founding institutions to keep alive those painful
memories of the injustice and suppression of
voices. And it is time to discuss the modalities
with which we should go ahead. For we know
adequately that the absence of viable civil
society dis- course is one of the preconditions
for failing "programmes to improve human
conditions"; it is no surprise that such a
failure would worsen human conditions under an
oppressive regime.17 Because in Gujarat, with
suppression of discussion on carnage, now
development is going to be the new rhetoric
demanding human sacrifice.
Here, one feels terrorised at the pros- pects of
this particular assortment of situ- ations -
national security and develop- ment forming the
hollow buzzwords of the regime, simplification or
levelling of society by ignoring its inherent
heterogeneity, conception of the social change
and deve lopment as an instant mix concoction
(for selected sections of society), weak- ening
of the civil society institutions,18 and a regime
that denies possibilities of polyphony and
refuses to engage with the dissenting voices. As
James Scott candidly explains to us through cases
quoted from histories of modern western nations,
here we have all these potencies ready in Gujarat
and the warning of Tarun Tejpal looms large - "Be
Afraid"!
I am thankful to Viswanathan, Sunny Jose, Amita
Shah, Jharana Pathak, Tommasso and Ghanashyam
Shah who shared with me their observations on
Gujarat and especially to Keshab Das and Sanal
Mohan who patiently went through a previous draft
and made many suggestions for improvements;
however, any shortcomings are entirely mine.
Amruth M (amruth at gidr.ac.in) is a social
scientist with the Gujarat Institute of
Development Research, Ahmedabad.
Notes
1 Neera Chandhoke, Praveen Priyadarshi, Silky
Tyagi and Neha Khanna, 'The Displaced of
Ahmedabad', Economic and Political Weekly,
October 27, 2007, 10-14.
2 A set of stealth video accounts of vainglories aired by
predators about their role in the 2002 carnage, re-2002 carnage, re-
leased by the Tehelka weekly (on internet see:
http://www.tehelka.com/story_main35.asp?filename=
Ne031107gujrat_sec.asp) and telecasted on Aaj Tak
television channel (on October 25).
3 Voters in Gujarat's 182 legislative assembly
constitu- encies are to vote on December 11 and
16.
4 Observers of the Gujarat society have pointed
this out. Another distinct feature of the 2002
killings was lack of spontaneity and these
killings were virtually one-sided, in which the
attackers and causalities were almost completely
communally segregated so much so that to describe
it with any word that would mean "riot" involving
two communal groups would be totally misleading.
5 There is widespread disagreement about the
appropriateness of the timing of the exposure,
but our concern is not the appropriateness of the
timing of the exposure but rather to look at its
impact/ reception.
6 These observations are based on the author
validat- ing his experiences with observations on
Gujarat so- ciety by academicians from the state.
Besides obser- vations by journalists are also
consulted. For instance see Prashant Jha,
'Gujarat as Another Country: The making and
Reality of a Fascist Realm', cover story, Himal
Southasian, October 2006.
7 Times of India, 'Congress Wary of All-out Attack', October 27, 2007.
8 He walked out of an interview on October 19,
2007 after having been asked questions pertaining
to post-Godhra carnage. For more details on the
interview please visit the following web page:
http://www.hin-
duonnet.com/2007/10/22/stories/2007102254891100.htm.
It is known that one of the conditions for grant-
ing an interview with the chief minster is that
no questions on the post-Godhra carnage will be
asked.
9 Tarun Tejpal, Tehelka internet edition:
http://www.
tehelka.com/story_main35.asp?filename=Ne031107
Tarunspiece.asp
10 The district collector of Ahmedabad, who also
holds judicial powers, ordered four TV channels
off the air on October 25, 2007. The channels
were: CNN-IBN, IBN7, NDTV and Aaj Tak -
CNN-IBN.2007. "Govern- ment to meet on news
channel blackout in Gujarat. On Tuesday, October
30, 2007 at 07:56 in Nation sec- tion CNN-IBN,
published on Tuesday, October 30, 2007 at 07:56
in Nation section.
11 The release of the movie was effectively
torpedoed by Hindutwa outfits without there being
any official ban against it as different from the
case of Fanaa where the state officially banned
the movie. See Urvish Kothari, 'Parzania and the
Dictator, of Gujarat: Who Was Responsible for the
Ban on the Release of Parzania in Gujarat?
Apparently Nobody', Himal South Asian, March
2007. For the mechanism of effecting such
censorship see Amardeep Singh, 'The Communalisa-
tion of Censorship', Himal SouthAsian, August
2007. 12 As early as March 2002, when the
post-Godhra killing was still on, political
observer and columnist Praful Bidwai had
explicitly alleged state collusion in the
killings. See article: Praful Bidwai, 'End the
Butchery, Sack Modi', Frontline: Volume 19-Issue
06, March 16- 29, 2002. Also see Concerned
Citizens Tribunal - Gujarat 2002. Crime against
Humanity:
An Inquiry into the Carnage in Gujarat, List of
Incidents and Evidence, three vols, published by
Anil Dharkar, for Citizens for Justice and Peace,
Mumbai. Many reports in the print as well as
visual media also explicitly brought out
evidences in the same direction.
13 Giorgio Agamben, State of Exception, tr Kevin
Attell, The University of Chicago Press, Chicago,
2005. In India a variety of constitutional
provisions and special laws such as 'Prevention
of Terrorism Act' (POTA) has been the latest
among the special laws that has been in force
with provisions to detain and suspend the
fundamental rights in the pretext of pro- tecting
of National security.
14 Giorgio Agamben, Homo Sacer: Sovereign Power
and Bare Life, tr Daniel Heller-Roazen, Stanford
Univer- sity Press, Stanford, 1998.
15 See the relevant portion Neera Chandhoke et
al, 'The Displaced of Ahmedabad', Economic and
Political Weekly, October 27, 2007, where the
internally dis- placed is shown to be forced to
live beside the urban waste dump in Ahmedabad.
16 This is not to ignore the significant role
played by a handful of concerned groups,
individuals and NGOs. But for their efforts many
a victim could not have accessed the judicial
system, and society outside Gujarat would not
have known the carnage. But here it is to state
their state-crafted structural constraints in
reaching to a wider public.
17 James C Scott, Seeing Like a State: How
Certain Schemes to Improve Human Condition Have
Failed, Yale University Press, New Haven, 1998.
18 For instance see Express News Service, 'Sibal:
Modi to be Booked If Cong Comes to Power', The
Indian Express, posted online: Friday, November
02, 2007. which accuses that the "...post of
Lokayukta is lying vacant since 2003; the Deputy
Speaker has not been appointed since 2002; the
State Human Rights Com- mission is headed by a
Chairman but no members have been appointed".
______
[5]
ETHNOPHOBIA IN GUWAHATI: REFLECTIONS ON TWENTYFOURTH NOVEMBER
by Prasenjit Biswas
A new metro dotted with a swanky skyline shows a
potent underbelly for the crimes of passion on
the street! An Adivasi women, Mandini, being
outraged on its street in the presence of a
cheering crew of camera wielding mob gives a mix
of virile pleasure with an aesthetic of crime. On
this obstreperous note, one sees the extent of
criminal retaliation on emaciated menfolk of the
Adivasis by the urban bred mob of post graduates,
restaurant waiters and even young men from
respectable middle class homes.
Adivasis came for justice and recognition on this
ominous day of twentyfourth of November to this
new metro. Being bruised, tortured and killed,
they all were kept holding their ears by the
police as a symbolic admission of their guilt.
They are the marginalized and bone-turned-white
arkati labourers who currently are the pluckers
of leaf in the gardens of flamboyantly proud
estate owners of Assam. It is a pride built on
the shame of the dehumanized Adivasis, now
re-enacted in the assaults on their men and
women. Official statements indeed say it as
'retaliation after the Adivasis went berserk'!
The wounded and the dead tell it all- who bore
the reckless beating by these retaliators. The
emaciated, malnourished and bucolic menfolk of
the Adivasi protestors were surrounded, stoned,
kicked and thrown into gutters by these
retaliators. The Adivasi women rallyists were
subjects of lewd comments from this set of
tormentors. Still they are held guilty of their
shame and harassment. The culpable homicide of
Samson Naguri and the pronominal 'she' called
Mandini instantiate a systematic collusion
between the State and the retaliators. After the
shrill mayhem, the State now atones by a series
of commissioned inquiries, transfers and 'sack'
of some bureaucrats and police officers.
In the domain of the civil society a there is an
orchestrated attempt to portray the lack of shame
on twentyfourth November as a legitimate
expression of 'animosity' against the
transgressors on the street, the Adivasis. One is
appalled to hear a neo-Nietzschean vein of
ressentiment from among the silent majority of
Assam's intellectuals, elites and politicians
about a historic sense of being the target of
Adivasi anger. The projection of Adivasis being a
mob of angry drunken lot is a schematic inversion
of ethnic rage on any claim of recognition by
anyone whom they consider 'other' within the
layered and nuanced contours of Assam's language
and culture.
The rage went in disciplining the Adivasi
protestors as they could not take the abuses
hurled at their womenfolk on their march to the
State headquarters. What the great existentialist
thinker Sartre called 'crime of passion', that
is, a crime of lust, consternation and contempt
that arises from a deeper sense of alienation
found its expression. Politically speaking,
constant harping on the theme of identity crisis
among the ethnic elites of Assam from their
non-ethnic others such as tribals,
minorities-religious and linguistic, Adivasis and
immigrants has already become a paranoia. The
influence of ethno-nationalism cuts deep into the
democratic sensibilities of self-righteous
sections of Assam's civil society, who are yet to
raise its voice against street hoodlums
conducting mayhem on Adivasi rallyists. The
result is that a vicious cycle of violence now
touches Adivasi hamlets and they now too become
revengeful on their counterpart. The human right
groups, the conscience keeping intellectuals and
the culture personalities suddenly fell silent
when the instigators and the organizers of such
dastardly outrage and killing are trying to speak
in the name of Adivasi rage on the Assamese
elites. Those who inquisitioned the Indian State
for Kakopatahar, secret killings and monopoly of
violence are now numbed by a passionate
ethnophobia, the phobia of the other, even if the
other is weak. Acts of retaliation, to say the
least, is now condoned by these self-respecting
individuals and groups. In effect, this
pragmatically silent crew of opinion makers of
Assam is now recovering from the shock of being
caught in a narrow ethnic chauvinism as
littérateurs are slowly penning down the 'swirls
in the heart' generated by Mandini's rape. In
this catharsis of victors, the Adivasis as
transgressors within the civic space of Guwahati
( they were not given permission to hold the
rally) are continued to be paid back in a
punishing coin. Home minister Shivraj Patil
declared in the Lok Sabha that the Adivasis of
Assam have lost their tribal characteristics and
in effect, they are neither included in the list
of tribes nor they become a part of the Assam's
ethnic mosaic. They are just there in Assam as an
exterior of both the State and the civil society.
Guwahati, if described as the cosmopolis of the
proud tea producers of Assam, cleans up the wound
that it inflicted on the Adivasis by boasting its
eligibility to host the first India international
tea convention.
Mr Biswas is Reader,
Dept. of Philosophy
North Eastern Hill University
Shillong-793022
Meghalaya,India.
He is is also a part of Barak Human Rights Protection Committee,
Sadarghat Road, Silchar-1, Assam, India holding
the position of Director, Research and
Publication.
[See Also]
Peace in India's North-East : Meaning, Metaphor
and Method: Essays of Concern and
Commitment/edited by Prasenjit Biswas and C.
Joshua Thomas.Peace in India's North-East :
Meaning, Metaphor and Method: Essays of Concern
and Commitment/edited by Prasenjit Biswas and C.
Joshua Thomas. New Delhi, Regency, 2006, xxxii,
480 p., tables, $55. ISBN 81-89233-48-3.
Contents: Acknowledgements. Preface.
Inaugural address. Presidential address. Editor's
introduction/Prasenjit Biswas and C. Joshua
Thomas. I. Meaning of peace: 1. Structure,
processes and conflict discourses: problems and
prospects of conflict-resolution and peace
building with a focus on North-East
region/Karunamay Subuddhi. 2. The idea of
peace/Sujata Miri. 3. Indian 'Nation State' and
crisis of the 'Periphery'/Bhagat Oinam and Homen
Thangjam. 4. Sociological reflections on peace
process in North-East India/C. Nunthara. 5.
Ghosts of colonial modernity: identity and
conflict in the Eastern Frontier of South Asia/A.
Bimol Akoijam. II. Metaphor of peace: 6. The cry
of the Naga people/V.K. Nuh. 7. Politics of peace
process in North-East India: a case of
Nagaland/Girin Phukon. 8. Redefining peace in
India's North-East/Patricia Mukhim. 9. On peace
as a metaphor: an existential-phenomenological
perspective/Dipankar Kar. 10. Institutional
designs and ethnopolitical conflict
transformation: assessing peace-building
initiatives in North-East India/Rajesh Dev. 11.
Her masters' voice: Women, peacemaking and the
genderisation of politics/Sajal Nag. 12. Just
development key to peace process in Tripura/Subir
Bhaumik. 13. Poetics of peace: orality in the
Khasi context/Esther Syiem. 14. Peace without
peace: metaphor without a method in the 'State of
Exception' called 'North-East India'/Prasenjit
Biswas. 15. Ka suk ka sain: an examination of
peace process in Khasi context/Basil Pohlong. 16.
Road to peace: untying the Assam Bind/Wasbir
Hussain. 17. Reflections on the peace process in
Assam/Udayon Misra. III. Method of peace: 18. War
and peace in India's North-East: issues,
complexities and options - a plea for
strengthening the civil society/Gurudas Das. 19.
Role of various agencies in the peace process
leading to the signing of Mizo Accord
1986/Sangkima. 20. Naga Resistance Movement and
the peace process in North-East India/H. Srikanth
and C.J. Thomas. 21. Indo-Naga Political Conflict
Resolution and agenda for change/A. Lanunungsang
Ao. 22. Peace accords in Tripura - background and
analysis/Sukhendu Debbarma. 23. Evolution of the
peace process in the context of Hmar
Struggles/Jishnu Dutta. 24. Peace process in
North-East India: the Arunachal scenario/Pura
Tado. 25. Ethnic struggles in Assam: an
observation/Shakuntala Bora. Appendices: 1.
Rapporteur Report. 2. Resolution.
______
[6]
The Hindu
Dec 11, 2007
INDIA IN THE WORLD: HOW WE SEE OURSELVES
by Meera Nanda
As many as 90 per cent of us told the Pew
pollsters that religion must be kept separate
from government policy. But in reality, how many
of us stand up for God-government separation,
something we say weare committed to?
"Mirror, mirror on the wall, who is the fairest
of us all?" A modern version of the Snow White
question was recently asked of people in 47
countries across the world by the United
States-based Pew Foundation for its 2007 Global
Attitudes survey.
Guess who is the most bewitched by their own
self-image? We are. Indians rank number one in
the world in thinking that they are number one in
the world, at least when it comes to their
culture.
The Pew poll asked people in 47 countries if they
agreed or disagreed with the following statement:
"our people are not perfect, but our culture is
superior to others." Indians topped the list,
with a whopping 93 per cent agreeing that our
culture was superior to others, with 64 per cent
agreeing completely, without any reservations.
Now all people have a soft spot for their own
culture. But to see how off-the-charts our vanity
is, let us compare ourselves with the other
"ancient civilisations" in our neighbourhood.
Compared to our 64 per cent, only 18 per cent of
the Japanese and only 20 per cent Chinese had no
doubt at all that their culture was the best.
Indeed, close to one quarter of Japanese and
Chinese - as compared to our meagre 5 per cent -
disagreed that their ways were the best.
The U.S. - a country universally condemned for
its cultural imperialism - comes across as
suffering from a severe case of inferiority
complex when compared with us. Only 18 per cent
Americans had no doubts about the superiority of
their culture, compared with our 64 per cent.
Nearly a quarter of Americans expressed
self-doubts, and 16 per cent completely denied
their own superiority. The corresponding numbers
from India are five and one per cent.
The strange thing is that for a people who think
so highly of our own culture, we are terribly
insecure. A startling 92 per cent of Indians -
almost exactly the same proportion who think we
are the best - think that "our way of life needs
to be protected against foreign influences."
Here, too, we beat the Japanese, the Chinese, and
the Americans by about 25-30 percentage points.
When it comes to feeling embattled and needing
protection, we are closer to our Islamic
neighbours, Pakistan (82 per cent) and Bangladesh
(81 per cent). Indeed, we feel so embattled that
84 per cent of us want to restrict entry of
people into the country, compared with only 75
per cent of those asked in the U.S., a country
where legal and illegal immigration is of a
magnitude higher than anywhere in the world.
So, paradoxically, our vanity is matched only by
our persecution complex. The Pew survey did not
probe deeper into what exactly we are so proud
of, and what we are so scared of. But given that
almost all of us grow up hearing how "spiritual"
our culture is, it is quite likely that we worry
that foreign cultures will corrupt our spiritual
values with their crass materialism.
Well, we need not worry. When it comes right down
to it, we are as materialistic as the worst of
them. Indians turn out to be among the most
gung-ho when it comes to support for "free"
markets. The Pew poll asked this question: "most
people are better off in a free market economy,
even though some people are rich and some poor."
The enthusiasm for the market economy in India
exceeded that in the U.S., the bastion of
unrestrained capitalism: 76 per cent of Indians,
as compared with 70 per cent of Americans, are
pro-market despite the problem of inequality. A
solid 40 per cent of Indian respondents had no
reservations and no doubts about the desirability
of markets, while only 25 per cent of Americans
were so unreserved.
A comparison with China and Russia - two
countries with memories of a communist past - is
instructive. While China and Russia are as much,
if not more, integrated into the global economy
as us, only 17 per cent of Russians and 15 per
cent of Chinese supported the markets without any
reservations and doubts.
More complicated
But we are actually more complicated than these
numbers indicate. While we say we like free
markets, 92 per cent of us also want the state to
step in and take care of the poor. Our level of
support for a welfare state is, commendably, much
higher than in the U.S. (70 per cent) and is
comparable to support for public welfare in
Russia (86 per cent) and China (90 per cent).
Indian support for state intervention on behalf
of the poor is actually higher than it is in
France (83 per cent), Germany (87 per cent), both
of which have highly developed state welfare
economies.
On the whole, Indian public opinion appears to
support a benign capitalism where the state
ensures the welfare of the poor. At least this is
what we tell the pollsters. This would be great
if our actions matched our words. While we say
that we are for state intervention on behalf of
the poor, our upper and middle classes (the kind
of people foreign pollsters talk to) have always
preferred privatised services in schools,
hospitals, transportation, and garbage collection
and, down the list, over public goods that the
poor can also benefit from. The haves in India,
on the whole, do not extend a sense of solidarity
to the poor. While the educated professionals who
are reaping the gains of globalisation have
gained enormously from state-subsidised education
and other urban privileges, they see their
success as the fruit of their own good karma and
the grace of God, of course. In the God
department, we Indians simply leave others in the
dust. We topped the list at 80 per cent agreeing
with the statement that "success in life is
pretty much determined by forces outside our
control." No other country came even close: the
U.S. stood at a mere 33 per cent, China at 65 per
cent, Russia at 59 per cent, and Japan at 47 per
cent.
Granted that God or Fate are not the only forces
outside our control: indeed, sometimes even a
babu in an office can become a "force outside
your control" if you don't have enough money to
bribe him. But considering how much time, money
and effort we spend on placating the gods and the
stars, it is quite likely that our respondents
had these supernatural forces in mind.
Indeed, 92 per cent of Indian respondents told
the Pew pollsters that "religion was very
important" to them. Only Senegal beat us at 97
per cent. But we came out ahead of our South
Asian neighbours, with Pakistan at 91 per cent
and Bangladesh at 88 per cent. Japan is
practically atheist at 12 per cent, while the
Chinese simply did not allow the question to be
asked. The U.S., fabled for its religiosity among
the richer countries, trails far behind us at a
mere 59 per cent.
Not only do we think God is "very important," we
hold belief in God as an indicator of personal
morality. As many as 66 per cent of us think that
"it is necessary to believe in God in order to be
moral and have good values." In other words, a
majority of us believe that atheists cannot be
moral. We are closer in this to our Islamic
neighbours, with Pakistan at 88 per cent and
Bangladesh at 90 per cent, than to the Chinese
(17 per cent) and the Japanese (33 per cent).
Another striking feature of our views regarding
religion is the gap between what we say and what
we do. As many as 90 per cent of us told the
pollsters that "religion is a matter of personal
faith and must be kept separate from government
policy." In this, we are ahead of the U.S. (80
per cent), the country which swears by the "wall
of separation" between church and state. Our
numbers are right up there with the most
secularised countries in the world, with Britain
and France at 91 per cent and Germany at 88 per
cent.
So we want religion to be kept separate from the
government. But when did you last hear anyone
protesting when our presidents and prime
ministers, in their official capacities, bow
before gurus and sants? Idols and pictures of
gods and goddesses openly and routinely adorn
government offices - from police thanas to
libraries in public universities. How many of us
stand up for God-government separation, something
we say we are committed to?
All said and done, we have many miles to go
before we can match the high expectations we have
of ourselves. The good news, of course, is that
we have such high expectations of ourselves.
(The complete survey can be found at http://pewglobal.org).
______
[7] Announcements:
(i)
Subject: December 13 , 2007 4pm Save Democracy Rally in Mani Nagar, Ahmedabad
Save Democracy Rally
Bhagat Singh Chawk, Hadkeshwar Circle, Mani Nagar, Ahmedabad
Time: 4-4.30pm arrival of participants , Flower
tribute to Bhagat Singh and movement songs
4.30pm Rally Starts
Route: 4.30pm-Hadkeshwar circle- Khokhra Cicle-
Khokhra Village, Mani Nagar Railway Crossing,
Mani Nagar Railway Station, AMTS Bus Stand-6.00pm
Anhad has been campaigning in Mani Nagar( Modi's
Constituency) for the past one week. Our
volunteer teams have reached out Anhad material
exposing the myth of Vibrant Gujarat and the
divisive policies of the present govt. to 80,000
households in our door to door campaign. We have
organised 5 public meetings so far and one
cultural evening.
Please do join us.
Dil Main Jo Dar Ka Qila Hai, Tod do Andar Se tum
Ek Hi Dhakke Main Apne Aap Yeh Dheh Jayega
Aao Mil Kar Ham Chale Adhikar Apne Cheen Len
Karwan Jo Chal Pada hai Ab Na Roka Jayega ----Safdar Hashmi
Anhad Collective
PS: We found that majority of the people( urban
poor) in Mani Nagar live under extremely poor and
unhygienic conditions. Media ,both local and
national ,which leaves no opportunity to talk
about vibrant Gujarat has not bothered to see
what is happening in Chief Minister's own
constituency.
- - -
(ii)
Thalassemia: A Dire Social Issue
Over 8 million Pakistanis suffer from
thalassemia, a genetic blood disorder. Join us at
t2f for a mini awareness workshop conducted by
Concern for Children Trust.
Date: Friday 14th December, 2007
Time: 7:00 pm
An Audio Visual Dialogue
This Saturday night, t2f presents a unique gig
featuring The Experience and Kohi Marri. Kohi's
visual compositions based around themes of
violence, pacifism, and hope will challenge the
band to interpret art in real time. Join us for
an evening of experimental multimedia and an
entirely new sound.
Date: Saturday 15th December, 2007
Time: 10:00 pm
Minimum Donation: Rs. 200. Please support the
PeaceNiche platform for open dialogue and
creative expression generously.
Celebrating Urdu Poets: Habib Jalib
A free spirit and a poet of the people, Habib
Jalib spent most of his life on the streets and
behind bars. He never compromised, never gave in,
and never gave up. Jalib lived through one
dictatorial regime after another and despite bans
and threats to his life, he remained a daring
revolutionary, inspiring the masses with his
impassioned verse. Join us at t2f as we celebrate
the life, times, and work of the legendary Habib
Jalib.
Date: Sunday 16th December, 2007
Time: 6:30 pm
Minimum Donation: Rs. 100. Please support the
PeaceNiche platform for open dialogue and
creative expression generously.
Venue: The Second Floor
6-C, Prime Point Building, Phase 7, Khayaban-e-Ittehad, DHA, Karachi
Phone: 538-9273 | 0300-823-0276 | info at t2f.biz
Map: <http://www.t2f.biz/location>http://www.t2f.biz/location
----
(iii) BOOK LAUNCH
Dear Friends:
Women's involvement and participation in
peacemaking and peace building as well as in
other areas of security was formally accepted by
the United Nations Security Council in Resolution
1325 on Women and Peace and Security, adopted in
October 2000. However, in the seven years since
UNSCR 1325, there has been barely nominal
participation of women in peace processes, no
women mediators and only minimum roles for women
in peace building. This highlights the fact that
these legal instruments will be confined to the
archives unless there is a concerted effort to
support these initiatives in practice.
The South Asia Regional Office of IDRC invites
you to a panel discussion on women's role in
building peace to mark the 7th anniversary of
UNSCR 1325 and to celebrate the launch of a new
book "Women Building Peace between India and
Pakistan" co-edited by Shree Mulay and Jackie
Kirk.
Speakers:
Shree Mulay, Ph.D., Professor at McGill
University's Department of Medicine and former
Director of the McGill Centre for Research and
Teaching on Women (MCRTW)
Richa Singh, Ph.D., Feminist Researcher
associated with Aman Trust, Delhi, working in the
area of gender and conflict
Panel discussion will be followed by High Tea.
Time: 3:30 - 5:00 PM
Date: Friday, December 14, 2007
Place: IDRC Conference Room, 208 Jor Bagh [New Delhi]
Please RSVP to
<mailto:jmalik at idrc.org.in>jmalik at idrc.org.in at
2461 9411 ext. 107
Kind regards,
Navsharan Singh
_____
(iv)
13th Inter-School Drama Competition
The Kaifi Azmi Trophy
4th. Inter Collegiate Drama Competition
The P. L Deshpande Trophy
Dear Sir
Indian Drama and Entertainment Academy(IDEA) has
been working for the promotion of Hindustani
Theater for many years and has been staging plays
on relevant social issues from time to time
mostly topical and which have relevance to the
people in general and effecting the day to day
activities.
IDEA has been actively involved in staging plays
written by the legendary writer SHRI PREM CHAND
from August 2005 in remembrance and the occasion
of 125 years of his birth anniversary which fell
on 31st July 2005. We (IDEA) began staging plays
based on the stories of the legendary writer and
have performed about 122 stories as plays till
date and further desire to stage another 168
stories during the next two years. In this way,
we (IDEA) have paid homage to this great writer
in a unique way and have also succeeded in
spreading his message in form of plays, which
were penned over 100 years back. In our above
endeavor we (IDEA) have received very warm,
unending and unconditional support from the
media, print as well as electronic, and other
individuals who have appreciated the values of
these writings? We (IDEA) humbly submit that
nobody has ever paid homage to any writer as it
has been done for SHREE PREM CHAND. We have been
performing regularly
every Saturday at Keertan Kendra, Juhu, and we
also perform at various other venues at the
invitation of several N.G.Os.
DATE OF EVENTS: 27th December at Mysore
Association Hall, Kings Circle [Bombay] from 9.30
a.m to 10 p.m.
MOTIVE BEHIND THESE EVENTS: To hunt talent at
the school and college level and create a
platform for talented youths. To encourage them
and make them aware of the vast and golden
culture of their country.
Expected Colleges: 10 Schools and 5 Colleges from Mumbai and Suburbs.
Target Audience: Students, housewives,
businessmen, people from corporate sector,
Doctors, Lawyers, Teachers, people from the
literary world, Media person, Politicians etc.
Last Date for submission of Entry Forms: is 15th
December between 6.30 p.m. to 9.30 p.m. at
Keertan Kendra, Juhu, Schools and Colleges who
have not received entry forms may contact on
9821044429. Entries accepted on first come first
basis before the last date. Limited entries will
be accepted (10 Schools, 5 Colleges)
Regards,
Yours truly,
Mujeeb Khan
(President- IDEA)
_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/
Buzz for secularism, on the dangers of fundamentalism(s), on
matters of peace and democratisation in South
Asia. SACW is an independent & non-profit
citizens wire service run since 1998 by South
Asia Citizens Web: www.sacw.net/
SACW archive is available at: http://insaf.net/pipermail/sacw_insaf.net/
DISCLAIMER: Opinions expressed in materials carried in the posts do not
necessarily reflect the views of SACW compilers.
More information about the SACW
mailing list